78 research outputs found

    Methodological triangulation of the student’s use of recorded lectures

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    Abstract: A lot of research into the use of recorded lectures has been done by using surveys or interviews. We will show that triangulation of multiple data sources is needed. We will discuss how students use recorded lectures according to their self-report and what actual usage of the recorded lectures can be derived from the data on the system. We will present the data collections and cover areas where the data can be triangulated to increase the credibility of the results or to question the students' responses. The triangulation shows that we lack data for a number of areas. We will need high-quality surveys and interviews combined with the log data to get a complete picture. We need to be able to link data sets together based on the identification of the individual students, which might raise privacy issues

    Students and recorded lectures: survey on current use and demands for higher education

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    Online recordings of lectures provide students with anytime-anyplace access to lectures. Research shows that students prefer courses accompanied by online recordings and an increasing number of universities provide recorded lectures. This paper presents the results of a study into the use of recorded lectures at two universities in the Netherlands. The goal of the study is to gain a better understanding of the way that this group of students use recorded lectures. This understanding will enable the creation of usage scenarios that need to be supported. Our results show that students use recorded lectures as a replacement for missed lectures and for study tasks, like preparing for an exam. A large proportion of the students report that they watch 75–100% of a recorded lecture when the view one. The fact that students did not mention the quality of the actual lectures appears not to influence the use of the recorded lectures. Recorded lectures for courses that only use the blackboard are viewed less often. There are also interesting differences in the use of recorded lectures of the different groups of students at the two universities. To increase the credibility and validity of the results, we need a more direct way to measure the use of recorded lectures by students. Methodological triangulation using the log data for the recorded lectures can provide this

    Measuring the Development of ICT Skills for Personalized Learning:Developing an Instrument for Dutch Primary Education

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    Our study investigates the development and validation of a questionnaire for competencies learners need to learn in a personalized way using ICT. 9 Dutch schools for primary education collaborate to make personalized learning with ICT evidence-informed. At these 9 iXperium schools, multidisciplinary design teams (consisting of primary school teachers and principals, teachers and students of the teacher-training program of a Dutch university of applied science, researchers from a Dutch university, and external ICT experts) design and research integrated interventions for PL with ICT. We defined personalized learning conditions before filtering the twenty-four learning objectives needed to measure development in personalized learning using ICT. The final questionnaire consists of thirty-three questions to cover the learning objectives. The validity and reliability of our questionary are analyzed in six steps. Cognitive validity (1) and a response model (2) are reported based on literature and a pilot with three iterative rounds of interviews (n=19). Internal constancy (3), confirmatory factor analysis (4), coefficient H (5) are reported after the first run of the questionnaire (n=800), and a test-retest alpha is reported after the second run of the questionnaire (n=800)

    Conceptual framework for Europe's future knowledge services

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    European roadmap for e-learning RTD in support of higher education and life long learning for the coming ten years. Deliverable 1, produced within the e-LearnTN project under the fifth Framework Programme of the European Commission.European Commission, IST-2001-3744

    Sister Mary Aquinas Devlin, éd., The Sermons of Thomas Brinton, Bishop of Rochester (1373-1389)

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    Gorissen P. Sister Mary Aquinas Devlin, éd., The Sermons of Thomas Brinton, Bishop of Rochester (1373-1389). In: Annales. Economies, sociétés, civilisations. 10ᵉ année, N. 3, 1955. pp. 428-429

    Alfanet Worked Example: What is Greatness?

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    This document consists of an example of a Learning Design based on the What is Greatness example originally created by James Dalziel from WebMCQ using LAMS. Note: The example has been created in parallel with the actual development of the Alfanet system. So no claims can be made that the example actually will work in the final system

    The Letters of John of Salisbury, vol. I, The Early Letters, éd. W. J. Millor, H. B. Butler.

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    Gorissen P. The Letters of John of Salisbury, vol. I, The Early Letters, éd. W. J. Millor, H. B. Butler. In: Annales. Economies, sociétés, civilisations. 11ᵉ année, N. 4, 1956. pp. 539-540

    Sister Mary Aquinas Devlin, éd., The Sermons of Thomas Brinton, Bishop of Rochester (1373-1389)

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    Gorissen P. Sister Mary Aquinas Devlin, éd., The Sermons of Thomas Brinton, Bishop of Rochester (1373-1389). In: Annales. Economies, sociétés, civilisations. 10ᵉ année, N. 3, 1955. pp. 428-429

    Facilitating the use of recorded lectures: Analysing students' interactions to understand their navigational needs

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    PhD research into the use of recorded lectures by students and how we can facilitate effective use. 1. How do students use recorded lectures according to their self-report? 2. What actual usage of the recorded lectures can we derive from the data on the system, and does that match with what students report? 3. How can we facilitate the use of recorded lectures by students using expert tagging and tagging by the students themselves? Ever since the start of the information and communication technology (ICT) era, universities and educational institutions all over the world have strived to incorporate its use into their pallet of instructional methods. The use of video, be it in the form of television broadcasts, DVDs or as video over the internet, has long been one of the important manifestations of the search for attractive learning materials that can be used independent of time and place. The recording and broadcasting of lectures has been an important solution for distance education. But more and more, universities enhance parts of their courses aimed at on-campus students with online video components and lecture recordings. They do this to allow students to review lectures at their own pace and at a time and place of their choosing. With this increase in use, the main research questions for this PhD research became increasingly more relevant. The research was conducted at two of institutions in the higher education sector in the Netherland, Fontys University of Applied Sciences and the Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e). There is previous research into this question, but studies show various shortcomings, such as lack of focus, meaning that the uses, technology and user groups were combined in a way that made it difficult to apply the results to our own situation. To establish some common ground, the dissertation starts with a description of a framework that more accurately determines the context of the research. The use of recorded lectures by students at the two institutions was studied using a survey and semi-structured interviews. Then the data collected by the Lecture Capture System was taken and processed into a dataset that allowed us to analyse the actual usage of the recorded lectures by the students. That data was then triangulated with the data from the survey and the semi-structured interviews. We also looked at improving the navigational support of the use of recorded lectures by offering tags that could be used to directly access specific parts of the recorded lecture. We investigated both the use of expert tagging and of tags created by the students themselves
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